debug | purego | |
---|---|---|
1 | 21 | |
115 | 1,868 | |
0.0% | 3.2% | |
0.6 | 8.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
debug
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The Simplicity of Single-File Golang Deployments
In the malware reverse engineering scene, there are a lot of forks of the upstream "debug" go library, because it allows loading, parsing, compiling and executing libraries from disk (rather than in-kernel or in-userspace).
And there's also "purego" as an implementation that directly generates shellcode.
Maybe those will help you, too?
I am just mentioning these because for my use cases those approaches worked perfectly, CGO free.
[1] https://github.com/Binject/debug
[2] https://github.com/ebitengine/purego
purego
- Show HN: Sqinn-Go is a Golang library for accessing SQLite databases in pure Go
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Netgate upstreams FreeBSD support to the purego project
Click here to view the commit: https://github.com/ebitengine/purego/commit/1a4ea678b5a7598275a28e787179da1b7a058b11
Click here to view the commit: https://github.com/ebitengine/purego/commit/1a4ea678b5a7598275a28e787179da1b7a058b11
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SIMD in Go
Maybe interesting for you: https://github.com/ebitengine/purego
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Ideas for GUI libraries?
most X11 functionality can be accessed via xgb|xgbutil (jezek has a current fork). nucular makes use of it via shiny. OpenGL and such libraries can be assumed to exist on those systems, so directly calling those c libraries without cgo is a possibility. Ebiten is currently working on it: purego.
- Go 1.21 will (likely) have a static toolchain on Linux
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The Simplicity of Single-File Golang Deployments
In the malware reverse engineering scene, there are a lot of forks of the upstream "debug" go library, because it allows loading, parsing, compiling and executing libraries from disk (rather than in-kernel or in-userspace).
And there's also "purego" as an implementation that directly generates shellcode.
Maybe those will help you, too?
I am just mentioning these because for my use cases those approaches worked perfectly, CGO free.
[1] https://github.com/Binject/debug
[2] https://github.com/ebitengine/purego
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Which platform/os do you prefer to use while using Go for developing your services, apps, CLIs, etc ?
https://github.com/ebitengine/purego Instead of Go using C toolchain, purego bypass it for already (should I say compiled or object-compiled)
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Precompiled CGo Code
You could use https://github.com/ebitengine/purego which would not require a C compiler to build
- 뉴스 스크랩 2023-02-14
What are some alternatives?
go-reuseport - reuse tcp/udp ports in golang
go-plugin - Golang plugin system over RPC.
bearclaw - tiny static site generator w/ rss
barcode-server - A simple daemon to expose USB Barcode Scanner data to other services using Websockets, Webhooks or MQTT.
executable-dist-plugin - A Gradle plugin which makes distribution zips runnable, as a sort of alternative to an uberjar. A London Beach production :guardsman::palm_tree:.
gamen - Cross-platform GUI window creation & management library in Go
release.sh - 🚀 A simple bash script for building Go projects for multiple platforms 💻💾
nocgo - dlopen in go without cgo
tableflip - Graceful process restarts in Go
iup-go - Cross-platform UI library with native controls
Quarkus - Quarkus: Supersonic Subatomic Java.
mach - zig game engine & graphics toolkit